Indeed, the okapi returned to London Zoo in 1979; these were the first okapi at London Zoo since the early 1950s.
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Yes, perhaps surprisingly they went almost thirty years without Okapi in the collection. When Bristol got them in the early 1960's, they had the only ones in the UK and for most of the next twenty years too, until either London, or Marwell, both acquired them at a similar time.
I believe London's breeding female was the first(and handraised?) calf born at Marwell which presumably makes Marwell, rather than London, the second breeder of them in the UK after Bristol. So the breeding order was; 1. Bristol. 2. Marwell. 3. London?
So am I...
I think there was a single male Hunting Dog in the 'dog pens' behind the Sealion stand.
Other species I can think of not held in that era would be; Anoa, Bearded Pig, Warthog, R.R. Hog(gone to Whipsnade now) Aardvark(?) Okapi( I can't remember when they started with them again? '80's?)
On the subject of "How many animal species that are today extinct has the London Zoo kept", we should also mention the Huia from New Zealand.
Apparently two male birds were kept at London Zoo in the 1880s - does anyone have further details?
I think we would spend ages listing the 100+ mammals lost since the 70s, but reading this & thinking more, i'm surprised how many are new since then. Several primates have been brought in for example , to replace the many lost: did London have white-cheeked gibbon, white naped mangabey, red faced spider monkey, titi, even diana monkey or colobus back then. I can't remember everything that was in the Sobell cages then, but given i can think of several they did have & lost such as mandrill , debrazzas, they can't have held all those other current species.I'll attempt to answer question 3.
There are a few mammals in the zoo (or kept there recently) that were not kept in the 1970s, includingI'm working from memory only, so there may be some mistakes here. Of course the number of mammals that are no longer kept is much larger.
- Alaotra bamboo lemur
- aye aye (although they aren't on display)
- Australian water rats
- giant jumping rat
- golden-headed lion tamarin
- hunting dog
- Indian lion
- Francois langur
- tamandua
Alan
Several primates have been brought in for example , to replace the many lost: did London have white-cheeked gibbon, white naped mangabey, red faced spider monkey, titi, even diana monkey or colobus back then. I can't remember everything that was in the Sobell cages then, but given i can think of several they did have & lost such as mandrill , debrazzas, they can't have held all those other current species.
So it looks like white cheeked gibbon & the mangabeys were absent in the 70s, as they held debrazzas, did they hold dianas as well in the Sobells back then? Colobus seem more likely!There's one member who will definitely know.I don't think they've ever had White-naped Mangabey before- formerly they had a group of (are they the nominate race?) Sooty Mangabey in the Sobells. The Sobells started off having representatives of the main different groups, so there was one species of Guenon, one Colobine, one Mangabey, one Macaque(pig-tailed) etc. I think the Colobus may have carried over from those days, possibly also the Dianas. I think there were Titis in the Clore. White-cheeked Gibbons appeared in the Sobells in the later years.
as they held debrazzas, did they hold dianas as well in the Sobells back then?
The Monkey groups I can remember clearly around the time it opened were; Sooty Mangabeys (came from Chester and other sources), Pig-tailed Macaques (bred from their own group of 2.3 from the old Monkeyhouse), Mandrills(from their own brother/sister breeding pair born at the zoo, and then outcrossed with Southport stock) I don't remember which Guenon species they had initially- I don't remember De Brazzas though. I just have a feeling the Dianas have been present for a long time, and probably the Colobus as well.
I remember the douc langur just after the Sobells opened.
The only guenons I can remember clearly are the talapoins in the Clore, but I agree that there was probably at least one other species.
I think there is a complete list of the first occupants of the Sobells in IZYB Volume 15 - but my library is packed away at the moment and I can't locate my copy. I think you're basically correct, except that I can add the assorted group of brown capuchins to your list. The only guenons I can remember clearly are the talapoins in the Clore, but I agree that there was probably at least one other species.
During the decade of the '70s other species certainly passed through. I remember geladas at one stage and I think there may have been a species of spider monkey too.
Alan
I remember the douc langur just after the Sobells opened.
I remember geladas at one stage and I think there may have been a species of spider monkey too.
Crocodile Inventory London Zoo 1st January 1973
American Alligator Alligator mississippiensis 3.2.1
Spectacled Caiman Caiman crocodilus crocodilus 4.1
Yacare Caiman Caiman crocodylus yacare 4 arrived in 1948
American Crocodile Crocodylus arcutus 1.0
Slender-snouted Crocodile Crocodilus cataphractus 1.0
Morelet's Crocodile Crocodylus moreletii 1.0
Nile Crocodile Crocodylus niloticus 1.0.3
Mugger Crocodile Crocodylus palustris 0.2
Saltwater Crocodile Crocodylus porosus 2.0
Siamese Crocodile Crocodylus siamensis 1.0
Amazing list. Shame they were mostly not pairwise.
London Zoo obtained four geladas and seven black spider monkeys in 1973, the year after the Sobell Pavilions opened.